Anthony Hinds

Anthony Frank Hinds
Born (1922-09-19)19 September 1922
UK
Died 30 September 2013(2013-09-30) (aged 91)
UK
Occupation Screenwriter, film producer
Parent(s) William Hinds

Anthony Frank Hinds, also known as Tony Hinds and John Elder (19 September 1922 – 30 September 2013),[1] was a British screenwriter and producer.[2][3] He was the son of the founder of Hammer Film Productions, William Hinds.

Early life

The son of performer Will Hammer (né William Hinds), Anthony Hinds was educated at St Paul's School.[1] He briefly joined his father's business before his war service as a pilot in the RAF during World War II.[1]

Career

In 1946 Hinds returned to Hammer Film Productions and initially produced a great many modest thrillers. One of these was The Dark Road (1947), one of the quota quickies, which featured a jewellery shop called 'Hinds', a reference to his father's original business. This business had been divided in the 1920s between William and his brother Frank Hinds. Frank's part is now the F. Hinds national jewellery chain.[4]

In the summer of 1953 Hinds was enthralled by the BBC's The Quatermass Experiment, a six-part science fiction thriller written by Nigel Kneale. Hinds was so impressed by what he saw that he suggested Hammer buy the big screen rights. They approached the BBC and snapped up the rights. After requesting the new 'X' certificate from the British Board of Film Censors,[1] The Quatermass Xperiment (1955) was a box-office success and was the first of the three Quatermass cinema films based on the television serials.

Hinds came up with the idea of hiring country houses and shooting films in the rooms and grounds of the locations, which saved the cost of kitting out a full studio.[1] The company acquired Down Place, renaming it Bray Studios, and was based there until 1966. Under the pseudonym John Elder he was a prolific screenwriter and from the mid-1960s he concentrated on this activity, though he produced the TV series Journey to the Unknown for LWT (1968–69) and The Lost Continent (1968).[5] The horror script The Unquenchable Thirst of Dracula, which he wrote in the 1960s for Hammer,[6] was never filmed. In October 2015 it was presented as a live stage reading by the Mayhem Film Festival at the Broadway Cinema in Nottingham, featuring the British film historian Jonathan Rigby as narrator.[7]

Selected filmography

References

External links

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